First Northern Bank was established in Dixon in 1910 as Northern Solano Bank. It changed its name to First Northern Bank of Dixon in 1980. The "of Dixon" was dropped in the 1990s to reflect its widening presence in the Solano/Yolo/Sacramento/Placer region. The Bank has 11 full service branches located in Dixon, Winters, Downtown Sacramento, Roseville, Folsom, West Sacramento, Vacaville (two locations), Fairfield, Woodland, and of course, Davis. In addition to an array of loans, accounts and investment products, the bank also offers free checking, free gifts, and free money for unused checks from another institution! The Bank does not charge any ATM fees.

One really nice feature of the bank is that the staff actually answer the phone, personally! There are no computerized phone systems that answer when you call, although if you prefer do your banking through a computerized phone system, there is one available.

Comments:

2005-12-27 21:42:51 I, and other people I know of, have applied for positions at this bank (we were qualified). Their human resources division was lousy, and never got back to me (despite many phone calls). I do not know how their service is. —JohnNapier

2009-06-30 13:18:58 Amazing customer service, the entire staff goes above and beyond. So refreshing to have a business actualy care about the customer and not just a number. —agerould

2010-05-12 11:59:58 The staff @ the Davis branch is great! Always courteous and effective to the needs of the customers. GO FNB!! —LRosales

2010-06-12 15:05:35 I've been with this bank for about 3 years and haven't had reason to complain up till now. My iTunes account was hacked into, and it had my debit card information on it — Stupid, I know! But, the only purchase I've made on iTunes was a single .mp3 in 2008, so I didn't realize the card number was still on there. An unknown person used my account to buy over $350 worth of applications for products I don't even own (iPads and iPhones). It is my belief that the person who did this was not actually the hacker, but used a "password dump" that a hacker uncovered, and posted online for anyone to use. This idea is backed up by the fact that this VERY SAME THING has been happening to a vast number of people in the past few months — their iTunes accounts are being accessed, hundreds of (or sometimes only one or two) purchases being made. Sometimes the offender changes the account's password, and sometimes they don't. With my password, this person was able to buy over $350 of apps and videos using my debit card, but wasn't one of the ones smart enough to CHANGE the password or email address so that I would no longer be able to log in. I cancelled my card as SOON as I saw the purchases appearing on my account, and went into First Northern Bank and told them what happened. I also told them how this has been happening to a lot of people, not just me — iTunes has a security issue and really has their hands full dealing with it. I filed a claim with First Northern Bank to get my money back, and a few days later received a barely coherent written response called "Resolution Notification". It had multiple spelling and punctuation errors, and it SEEMED to say that they don't believe me — that if someone actually hacked into my account, they would have changed my password, therefore, I'm lying, and actually was the one to make all those purchases and then try to cancel them. The quality of the letter is shocking to me, that it possibly made it past an editor and that they would actually send it out to a customer. It offends me, because I lost a lot of money that I really need right now, and they don't seem to care at all. Not only that, they sent me part of their Electronic Banking Services Agreement and Disclosure Statement, "Dispute over Goods and Services — If you have a dispute with a merchant regarding the quality, price, warranty, or otherwise of the goods and services you purchased with your card, you will have to settle your dispute with the merchant directly". In addition to this not being what happened to me at all — I did not file a claim about a dispute regarding any of the above — the copy of the agreement that they sent me clearly states that if you cancel your card within two days of finding out that it has been compromised, all of the charges will be cleared immediately. I cancelled my card within HOURS of it being compromised, and yet the charges still went through. Not only that, but if, as they say, I was lying, why in the world would I buy a bunch of applications for products I don't have, which is totally out-of-character if you look at my purchase history, and then change my mind and go so far as to CANCEL my card halfway through?

Further, the letter included a number which I could call "if you have any questions or if you would like to request documentation on which we based our decision". I called this number immediately, but all I got was the sound of a fax machine. They gave me a fax number to call.

I'm writing this here in the hopes that someone will read it and just become aware of the possibility of being treated like this, and the fact that iTunes has a huge security issue right now, and your bank might not be willing to deal with it. Nor will iTunes (I have contacted them as well). So please, take care. Try to avoid this situation. —gurglemeow

2011-05-20 10:32:19 First Northern has an on-going problem with its system for downloading account data into Quicken. I would not recommend setting up your accounts here if you use Quicken, as many people do. I have taken this problem all the way to the Technical Manager for the bank. She agreed that there was a problem, but after weeks, it is still not fixed. In summary, when you download data into Quicken, you will have a huge hassle balancing. The system is inconsistent in which transactions it downloads (sometimes missing transactions, sometimes downloading them a second time) and the downloaded balance generally is not correct. The latter problem the technical supervisor acknowledged. The former problem she did not recognize. Quicken is very simple and effective when properly set up. I've used it for years at other banks. Hopefully, First Norther will get this fixed and stop frustrating customers. —GeneWilson

2012-01-19 15:35:19 It is IMPOSSIBLE to talk to someone at this bank unless you go in!!!! I give up on them! I hate the big banks like BofA but at least I can speak to someone 24hrs a day if I have problems. —mra

2017-11-09 12:53:01 I'm amused by the last comment from 2012; I just called and -- although the first thing I heard was a robo-voice saying "I'll transfer you to that extension" -- I quickly got a live person, with a live personality, who answered my routine question. So, four exclamation points notwithstanding, it is quite possible to talk to a live person on the phone during business hours. —DougWalter